Tursiocola ziemanii Frankovich & M.J. Sullivan, 2015

Frankovich, Thomas A., Sullivan, Michael J. & Stacy, Nicole I., 2015, Three New Species of Tursiocola (Bacillariophyta) from the Skin of the West Indian Manatee (Trichechus manatus), Phytotaxa 204 (1), pp. 33-48 : 34-37

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/phytotaxa.204.1.3

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.13638944

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03942316-FFEA-D362-FF75-FA9EFE57FE31

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Tursiocola ziemanii Frankovich & M.J. Sullivan
status

sp. nov.

Tursiocola ziemanii Frankovich & M.J. Sullivan , sp. nov. ( Figs. 1–24 View FIGURES 1–13 View FIGURES 14–19 View FIGURES 20–24 )

The frustules are rectangular in girdle view with bluntly rounded ends and porose girdle copulae ( Figs. 1–6 View FIGURES 1–13 ). The valves are isopolar and narrowly lanceolate, tapering gradually from the middle of the valves to the juncture of the pseudosepta and the valve margin (approx. 1/4 of the valve length) and then tapering more rapidly towards rounded, produced, rostrate apices ( Figs. 7–13 View FIGURES 1–13 ). Length 20–61 μm, width 2.4–5.2 μm, length to width ratio 7.3–11.8. The valve face is slightly asymmetric around the narrow axial area with one half of the valve face wider than the other ( Figs. 7, 9–12 View FIGURES 1–13 ). The raphe is very fine and indistinguishable from the straight and more strongly silicified axial rib. The axial area is very narrow and widens at the diamond-shaped central area ( Figs. 7, 9–12 View FIGURES 1–13 ). The central area is intersected by a narrowing stauros that appears as a narrow highly refractive bar and extends to the valve margins where its width becomes only slightly larger than the interstriae width ( Figs. 1–6 View FIGURES 1–13 ). The transapical striae are slightly convergent/disrupted around the central area becoming mostly parallel towards the apices ( Fig. 10 View FIGURES 1–13 ), 22–25 in 10 μm. By focusing through the valve, pseudosepta can be seen to extend over approximately 1/4 of the valve length from the apices which then continue as narrow strips along the valve margin, widening in the central area where they fuse with the stauros forming a butterfly-like structure and two pyriform-shaped voids on either side of the central area ( Figs. 8, 13 View FIGURES 1–13 ).

Type:— UNITED STATES. Florida: Florida Bay, skin samples removed from a recently dead individual of a West Indian manatee Trichechus manatus in the vicinity of Coon Key , 25º 03’ 18” N, 80º 44’ 10 ”W, T. A. Frankovich, 28 October 2013 (holotype CAS! 223047, Figs. 1–24 View FIGURES 1–13 View FIGURES 14–19 View FIGURES 20–24 ; isotypes ANSP! GC59139 , BM! 101 786, BRM! Zu10/6) GoogleMaps .

μm; 17–18 = 2 μm; 19 = 1 μm.

SEM morphology:— Externally, the valve mantle slopes steeply without any clear transition between the valve face and mantle ( Figs. 14–15, 18–20 View FIGURES 14–19 View FIGURES 20–24 ). The valve face has uniseriate transapical striae composed of oval areolae extending onto the entire valve mantle ( Figs. 14–15, 18–20 View FIGURES 14–19 View FIGURES 20–24 ). The mantle margin is narrow and slightly more silicified than the interstriae area ( Fig. 20 View FIGURES 20–24 ). The areolae are arranged in fairly straight longitudinal rows, approximately 23 areolae in 10 μm ( Figs. 14–15, 19 View FIGURES 14–19 ). A straight, narrow, and more strongly silicified axial rib lies within the axial area that widens very slightly towards the central area ( Figs. 14–15, 18 View FIGURES 14–19 ). The raphe is very fine, straight and slightly eccentric ( Figs. 14–15, 18 View FIGURES 14–19 ). The central area is diamond-shaped with a narrow unpunctate stauros that extends to the valve margins ( Figs. 14–15, 18 View FIGURES 14–19 ). The stauros is slightly wider on the primary side of the valve ( Figs. 14–15, 18 View FIGURES 14–19 ). The external proximal raphe ends are simple, deflected towards the secondary side of the valve, and lie along the edge of the central area terminating where the stauros extends towards the valve margin ( Fig. 18 View FIGURES 14–19 ). The distal raphe ends are apparently bifurcated and obscured by overhanging siliceous flaps that bend towards the same side of the valve at both apices ( Fig. 19 View FIGURES 14–19 ). A siliceous rim curves around the valve apex ( Fig. 19 View FIGURES 14–19 ). A flange-shaped siliceous outgrowth is sometimes observed extending from the mantle on one side of the apex at one of the poles ( Fig. 14 View FIGURES 14–19 ).

Internal views of the valves reveal the butterfly-like structure that connects the pseudosepta to the central area and stauros ( Figs. 16–17 View FIGURES 14–19 , 21 View FIGURES 20–24 ). The pseudosepta extend from the apices as siliceous plates for approximately one-quarter of the valve length and then continue as narrow strips that run along the valve margins before widening at the “wings” of the butterfly-like structure in the central area ( Fig. 16 View FIGURES 14–19 ). The narrow strips of the pseudosepta briefly widen towards the valve center forming broad concave “wings” of the butterfly structure ( Figs. 18–19 View FIGURES 14–19 ). The pseudosepta and the butterfly-like structure enclose two pyriform-shaped areas on either side of the central area ( Figs. 16–17 View FIGURES 14–19 ). Internally, the raphe slits open along the middle of a strong siliceous rib that widens slightly in the central area ( Figs. 16–17 View FIGURES 14–19 ). Two knob-like structures are present on the rib on opposing sides of the raphe at the valve center ( Fig. 17 View FIGURES 14–19 ). The internal central area is hexagonal and fuses with the broad wings of the butterfly-like structure at an abrupt near 90º angle ( Fig. 17 View FIGURES 14–19 ). A narrow stauros intersects the central area ( Fig. 17 View FIGURES 14–19 ).

The girdle is composed of two copulae that are open on one end ( Figs. 20–24 View FIGURES 20–24 ) with a double row of transapically elongated pores, 17–22 in 10 μm ( Figs. 20, 22–23 View FIGURES 20–24 ). In whole frustules, the advalvar row is partially obscured by the valve mantle ( Fig. 20 View FIGURES 20–24 ).

Etymology:— the epithet honours Dr. Joseph C. Zieman (1943–), in recognition of his generous support of diatom research in Florida Bay.

T

Tavera, Department of Geology and Geophysics

CAS

California Academy of Sciences

ANSP

Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia

BM

Bristol Museum

BRM

Alfred-Wegener-Institut für Polar- und Meeresforschung

Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF